Civil War Music
Civil War Confederate songs
help to understand why Southern men enlisted to fight the North. The 1860
census reveals that a mere 4.8% of Southern whites owned slaves. Many were
yeomen farmers without slaves. Only in Mississippi
and South Carolina
did the percentage of slaves in the overall population exceed 50%. Historian
James McPherson’s book, For Cause and
Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War, analyzes letters, diaries, and
other written documents and concludes that many men joined the Cause as a
nationalistic endeavor rather than fighting strictly for slavery. The songs of
the Confederate South corroborate this theory.
Confederate Anthems
“We are a band of brothers,
And native to the soil; Fighting for our liberty, With Treasure blood and toil…”
So begins Harry McCarthy’s stirring 1861 tune, Bonnie Blue Flag, destined to become the second anthem of the
Confederate States, behind the popular Dixie. Song lyrics reveal
the mindset of average soldiers as they marched or spent days encamped,
awaiting battle. Historian Richard Hartwell refers to them as, “tuneful symbols
of Southern nationalism.” David Eicher writes that, “among the most significant
ways in which soldiers expressed….feelings of unity, especially while on the
march, was in song.”
Harry McCarthy came to New Orleans from Great Britain as an entertainer. Bonnie Blue Flag begins with a reference
to Henry V and Shakespeare’s “band of
brothers” battle speech. The analogy was obvious. Like Henry V, facing a vastly
superior French army at Agincourt in 1415, the
South was poised to defend its sovereignty against a foe that outnumbered them
by thirteen million people. McCarthy’s “band of brothers” was a celebration of
unity as well as an assurance of victory.
William Barnes’ 1864 Battle Cry of Freedom champions the idea
of freedom and independence: “Their motto is resistance – ‘To tyrants we’ll not
yield…” “Our Southern sky is brightening and soon we will be free…” Maryland, My Maryland begins by
referring to the Northern “despot,” while The
Flag of Secession, sung to the tune of the Star Spangled Banner, concludes the first stanza with, “Now the
flag of secession in triumph cloth wave; O’er the land of the free and the home
of the brave.” Confederate lyrics
reinforced the imagery of a tyrannical North that paralleled the despot George
III in 1776. Like the Founding Fathers, Southerners were fighting for the right
to be free.
Dixie, the most popular Southern tune and the song most associated with the
South, was written in 1859 by Daniel Decatur Emmett to be used in a variety
show. It was rapidly adopted by both North and South and Abraham Lincoln
counted it as his favorite tune. It came to be viewed at the Confederate
national anthem after it was used to open Jefferson Davis’ inaugural ball. In
July 1861 General Irvin McDowell’s men were singing Dixie as they advanced toward Bull Run.
Repulsed by P.T. Beauregard and Joseph Johnston, Southern soldiers adopted the
song as their own.
Revenge and Eulogies
Written after the end of the
Civil War, James Randolph’s Good Ol’
Rebel Soldier declares, “…We got three hundred thousand before they
conquered us.” The South I Love Thee More,
also written after the war, is a eulogy that compares the defeated South to the
coming of winter.
Southern Civil War songs
speak of independence and freedom, of repulsing a conqueror and defending the
home. The Flag of Secession predicts
that, “the Northmen shall shrink from our warriors’ might….O’er the land of the
freed and the home of the brave.”
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